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"Find
something outside yourself that is yourself.
Then devote yourself to it with all your heart."
~ Bob Walker, 1991
Photographer
and environmental activist Bob Walker found in the beauty of the
East Bay hills the stimulus for his tireless work to preserve the
Bay Area's open space. Forty of Walker's photographs capturing this
beauty are featured in the exhibition. The exhibition includes photographs
from the museum's Bob Walker Collection as well as original images
by other landscape photographers whose art photography came to be
used in support of environmental advocacy.
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Moss-covered
trees, Sinbad Canyon,
Pleasanton Ridge, November 1985
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The exhibition
places Walker's work in the context of the history of photography
in the environmental movement, demonstrating its relationship to
the work of such artist/activists as Ansel Adams, Phillip Hyde,
Eliot Porter, the Mono Lake Committee and Robert Dawson. Several
"rephotographs," by Ellen Manchester and Robert Dawson,
of sites photographed by Walker demonstrate the changes that have
taken place in the Bay Area landscape over the past two decades.
The exhibition also includes Walker's photographic equipment, correspondence,
maps, field books, scripts, and recordings of talks he presented.
A resource center provides brochures and contact information for
a variety of Bay Area and Northern California conservation and open
space organizations.
An accomplished
landscape photographer and 15-year San Francisco resident, Walker
(1952-1992) was a tireless open-space activist whose efforts helped
protect large tracts of East Bay open space from development. Thanks
largely to Walker's efforts, the Morgan Territory land bank in eastern
Contra Costa County, which held 1,500 acres when Walker first encountered
it, is now a regional park of 4,000 acres, while the state park
that embraces Mount Diablo has grown to 20,000 unspoiled acres.
It is now possible to hike from Morgan Territory to the summit of
Mount Diablo completely on public land, the culmination of a dream
Walker envisioned the first moment he set foot on Morgan Territory.
Like the landscape
photographers who preceded him, Bob Walker was initially motivated
by a feeling of connection to the environment. As he began to comprehend
the damaging impact of urban sprawl on the Bay Area's wild lands,
the photographs became more precise in their intent and power. Rather
than simply drawing on his photographs for an occasional foray into
public policy, as earlier landscape photographers had done, Walker
used them in exhibitions and slide lectures to educate the public
and to advocate specific land-use policies, turning them into powerful
and effective tools for social and political change.
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Storm
Clouds, San Leandro Bay, February 1986
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In his photography
Walker used very slow film with a tripod and timer, a technique
that resulted in landscapes with great depth of field. The photographs
were usually shot in the late afternoon, taking advantage of the
shadows and light created by the setting sun to illuminate the sensuous
quality of the landscape. The San Francisco Bay Guardian said of
his work, "Walker's shots of landscapes conjure up the style
of the old masters: ominous, cerulean clouds rolling over San Francisco
Bay at sunset, gently sloping hills of velvety green, a hazy light
cast across a lake that shimmers with the reds and golds of the
dry season."
Walker earned
his living as a freelance photographer specializing in the landscape
and as a consultant to the East Bay Regional Park District. Before
he died of AIDS at the age of 40, Walker was active in such organizations
as the Bay Area Ridge Trail Council and the Greenbelt Alliance,
was President of the Bay chapter of the Sierra Club, and was instrumental
in the formation of the Gay and Lesbian Sierrans. In August 1992,
the year he died, a ridge and new trail between Morgan Territory
Regional
Preserve and Mount Diablo State Park were named in his honor.
Walker's photographs
have been widely exhibited in museums and galleries in the Bay Area
and published in numerous state and regional publications. As a
volunteer he gave hundreds of slide shows of his work on behalf
of preservation campaigns, one of which is re-created in a video
presentation in the exhibition.
At the conclusion
of most of his slide shows and at the end of each of the hundreds
of conservation hikes he guided in Contra Costa and Alameda Counties,
Walker would insist that participants write postcards to government
leaders in support of open space preservation. To honor these efforts,
the exhibition concludes with a postcard station where current open
space issues are presented and visitors encouraged to write postcards
expressing their opinions on these topics.
After the
Storm: Bob Walker and the Art of Environmental Photography is
curated by Christopher Beaver, Judy Irving and Ellen Manchester
of the Independent Documentary Group. IDG is a nonprofit organization
committed to producing high-quality public-interest films, books,
photo exhibits, plays and other media. To date, the group's work
has focused on two areas: internationally, on peace, and regionally,
on the environment. Project leaders for the exhibition at the Oakland
Museum of California are Tom Steller, Chief Curator of Natural Sciences,
and Carolyn Rissanen, Registrar of Natural Sciences at the museum.
The
exhibition is cosponsored by the Oakland Museum of California, Gay
and Lesbian Sierrans, and the East Bay Regional Park District, with
additional funding from the Compton Foundation and the George Frederick
Jewett Foundation.
For more photography at OMCA visit our photography
resource page.
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